Coalition for Justice In Liberia Maintains That Justice for War Crimes Is Critical To Acheiving Reconciliation in Liberia

By Lovetta Tugbeh
Interim Executive DirectorCoalition for Justice in Liberia

The Coalition for Justice in Liberia (CJL), believes that Liberia’s future lies in establishing a solid foundation for justice. As we look towards 2014 and the years to come, let us make pursuing justice an integral component of peace and reconciliation.
The year 2013 witnessed many significant developments, but it will forever be remembered as the year the world lost one of its greatest icons in human history, in the person of the revered “Madiba” Nelson Mandela. His legacy on the arc of history will leave a lasting footprint for generations to come.

There are three great lessons of Mandela’s legacy. First, that freedom is an inherent right of all people, regardless of their race, ethnicity, class, religion, sexuality, or nationality. Second, that mankind can only learn, grow, develop, and prosper in an environment of peace, harmony, and democracy. Third and most importantly, mankind has a responsibility to sustain peace by building a solid foundation of justice, as peace and justice are intertwined and one cannot exists in the absence of the other.

When he was elected the first black president of the Republic of South Africa, Mandela and his comrades in the African National Congress (ANC) demonstrated their commitment to peace and justice by establishing the South Africa Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which provided the framework for those who had endured oppression under the brutal Apartheid regime for more than 300 years, to confront their oppressors. Where the commission had determined that there were egregious crimes and acts of injustice committed, it recommended that the laws be applied to its fullest. Those who were found to engage in war crimes and crimes against humanity experienced the full weight of the law.

Whereas other countries have considered the pursuit of justice as an essential component of peace and reconciliation, Liberia, on the contrary, has pursued a path by totally disregarding the element of justice with reckless abandon.Coalition for Justice in Liberia

Like South Africa, other countries which experienced civil wars where their citizens were senselessly subjected to crimes that caused untold deaths and suffering, took concrete steps to correct the injustices. Rwanda and Sierra Leone did so in 1994 and 2001 when their civil wars came to an end.

In 2001, the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) was established to investigate war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. For example, based on numerous reports from the United Nations and numerous human rights organizations, it is estimated that between 50,000 to 100,000 civilians lost their lives to various warring factions during the decade-long war. Some of the egregious crimes committed, included entire families being gunned down in the street, children and adults had their limbs, arms and legs hacked off, and girls and young women were taken to the rebel bases and sexually abused. The Special Court of Sierra Leone determined that there was serious violations of international humanitarian law, and sentenced those found guilty to face the full weight of the law, including death.

Rwanda also followed similar path. In Rwanda, it was estimated that nearly 500,000 to 1 million Rwandans, mostly civilians, were massacred in a war of genocide. The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) established in 1994, relentlessly prosecuted those who violated international humanitarian law.

These various experiences of war crimes gave the international community pause to consider war crimes deserving of severe punishment including life imprisonment or death. The investigations and prosecution of international crimes, including genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes—is a fundamental component of justice which strengthens peace in a postwar society, and brings healing and the restoration of human dignity to the victims and survivors of war.

Whereas other countries have considered the pursuit of justice as an essential component of peace and reconciliation, Liberia, on the contrary, has pursued a path by totally disregarding the element of justice with reckless abandon. In almost ten years, since the cessation of war, we’ve heard more talk about peace, which is absolutely essential to sustaining any relative progress and a fragile democracy—but there has been far less discussion about justice. Not a single, credible step has been taken to address the issue of justice. The two commissions established—the Independent Human Rights Commission, and the Peace and Reconciliation Commission—spearheaded by retired Judge Gladys Johnson and Ambassador George Manneh Weah—supposedly have nothing in their mandates that addresses the issue of justice.

Those opposed to justice have argued that the country is better off by keeping the focus on peace and reconciliation, because they argue that pursuing justice will unearth “old wounds” and would undermine whatever peace, stability, and national security being enjoyed by the country currently. We have to wonder what kind of country are we building that demonstrates no respect for the grievances of thousands of people—in Liberia’s case, nearly 250,000 victims and survivors.

Are we saying that the lives of those innocently killed are less important than those who perpetrated such heinous human rights violations? Should we be satisfied that the perpetrators of Liberia’s 14-year civil war have gotten away with murder, mutilation, and rape under the false pretense of peace and reconciliation? So, to those who are urging forgiveness, are they saying that no one should be held accountable for the crimes of war committed?

Even in the Bible, God was clear about what should be done to those who murdered His children. For example, in His Covenant with Noah (Genesis ch.9,vs.5-6), He said this: “Animals that kill people must die, and any person who murders must be killed. Yes, you must execute anyone who murders another person, for to kill a person is to kill a living being made in God’s image”. Hence, asking for accountability and justice is in no way the same as seeking revenge or witch-hunting as others would want to have us believe. God himself was forthright about justice, and this is the only way we can deal a death blow to impunity and begin the process of building a new and vibrant Liberian society!

Clearly, pursuing justice is not antithetical to peace and reconciliation, as those countries that have done so—South Africa, Rwanda, and Sierra Leone, do have economies that are flourishing and are quite stable and at peace.

Unlike those who portend that we should accept what is currently prevailing in Liberia, in the name of peace and reconciliation, we are not convinced that this path will sustain Liberia’s future. We in the Coalition for Justice in Liberia urge that in 2014, the issue of JUSTICE should resonate with those who have conscience and respect for human dignity.

Sharing a tapestry of voices from Africa’s first republic through stories, interviews, pictures, music, movies and much more to present an alternative picture of an emerging Liberia after years of civil conflict.

Barely three weeks after his release, fire burned rights activist, Vandalark R. Patricks and his colleagues Ralph Brown, Stephen Binda, Alfred Tah, Sarah Kortu including Mr. Sahr Yillia, an award winning human right activist have become major targets for their leading roles in the campaign for the prosecution of perpetrators of economic and war crimes in Liberia.
The above named persons are active members of the Concerned Liberians Against Corruption & Impunity (CLACI) which is a coalition of Liberian human right activists home and in the diaspora. Mr. Yillia is also the (CLACI) campaign Director for the European region leading several international negotiations for the establishment of a War Crimes Court in Liberia and also another option of prosecuting perpetrators under various international treaties outside Liberia. It can be recalled that in 2013/2014 while Mr. Yillia was in the UK among ten activists selected globally for a human right fellowship, their homes and office came under attacks several times at night by some men dressed in masks faces leading to their relocation to various other undisclosed communities for safety. Furthermore, recent international advocacy by Mr. Yillia where he is believed to have linked(CLACI) with Front Line Defenders, an acclaimed international rights organization and other international human rights defenders in Europe to intervene in Vandalark Patricks’s case has further put his life and colleagues in further danger as they continue receiving repeated calls from private telephone lines with threats of death if they don’t disembark from the current campaign. In the recent situation involving Vandalark Patricks who, according to him was allegedly injected by a police officer and later charged of Sedition and Criminal Libel against the Liberian leader for reading a civil society position paper on the increasing mysterious deaths of Civil society and Political activists in the country with impunity, Mr. Patricks colleagues Ralph Brown, Stephen Binda, Alfred Tah, Sarah Kortu and Mr. Yilia have all expressed great fear for their lives giving the security gabs that Liberia now has as individuals continue to die mysteriously in a war ravished Liberia, especially In the wake of the increasing mysterious disappearance and ritualistic killings of people as was in the recent case of Former Managing Director of the Liberia Petroleum and Refining Company plus others.